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4 Comments

CTO-as-a-Service for Startups: Should You Opt for It? 👨‍💻

Developing a tech product is undeniably challenging, as early decisions carry significant weight, shaping the entire trajectory of product development and impacting its future (e.g., scalability).

You have to choose the optimal infrastructure, architecture, tech stack, and feature set and make about a dozen other important decisions early on.

This is why having an expert in technology have your back when it comes to tech can make things much easier. A Chief Technology Officer (CTO) is the one to provide guidance, help you put together a team, solve complex problems, run audits, and steer the project’s tech.

Sadly, finding a great CTO is a huge challenge 🤯 Especially minding that startups often don’t have the funds to take on such a specialist full-time. That’s why they make use of CaaS, or CTO-as-a-service.

What are the benefits of such a collaboration model? When does it make sense for startups? What can an outsourced CTO help you accomplish?

Refer to the comprehensive guide provided to find the answers ➤➤➤

https://www.upsilonit.com/blog/cto-as-a-service-caas-for-startups-comprehensive-guide

posted to
Startups
on November 3, 2023
  1. 3

    I've done a couple startups, had an exit, and have been doing a lot of consulting of late because I don't have a company/product I find compelling enough to jump back into the trenches with. For me, selling myself as a "CTO-as-a-service" helps quickly explain what I bring to the table as a consultant. I've worked with companies from 3 months to 2 years on some kind of fractional basis. The reason people have worked with me is that I've done what they're trying to do (build a new tech company) and can really help accelerate the technical aspect of building their product or service. A couple of people I've known over the years have gone from being a part time CTO to becoming the full-time CTO, especially after a major fundraising round, because they found the team and market opportunity so compelling.

    What the article didn't talk about and what I'd like to share is the motivation to offer myself as a "CTO-as-a-service". As I mentioned earlier, I don't have a compelling idea I want to build myself so I'm choosing to be helpful and relevant by offering myself to other companies with cool/interesting/unique tech that I can help bring to market. It's fun to meet with passionate founders and it's awesome when we can take a basic idea/prototype and start building a meaningful business around it. It also helps me grow my perspective around different industries, markets, and business structures. For me, it feels as though I'm learning just as much from the companies I work with as they are from me - an all around win-win.

  2. 3

    Outsourcing the CTO in a tech startup seems like a really bad idea to me.

    Asking experts for advice on tech stack and such is fine, but I would call that a consultant, not "CTO-as-a-Service".

  3. 1

    I'm interested in your services. I'm also based in S. Korea and supply Tech Lead and CTO level developers globally. Let's talk about it! [email protected]

  4. 1

    Actually No. It makes sense because of the context but starting a tech business imply a lot of discussions you need to get inside. It should be a team member

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